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Fish out of water

When ancient fish first sprouted limbs and poked their heads out of murky river deltas to contemplate life on land, they did so in a subtropical landscape that is now Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic. On April 6, 2006, Nature article reported that the 375 –million-year-old fossilized missing link between fish and limbed land-lubbers was unearthed in June 2004 by American scientists who had been fossil-hunting in the area west of Grise Fiord, Nunavut since 1999.

The three-metre-long Tiktaalik roseae had fish-like scales, fins and gills, but a body structure more like a land-dwelling animal similar to a crocodile. Its rib structure allowed it to support itself under the force of gravity in the absence of pressure from the surrounding water. It had nostrils and eyeballs positioned on top of its flat head. Leggy appendages with flexible elbow and wrist structures and the beginnings of digits in the place of fins allowed the critter to do a push-up, raising its head above the surface of the fresh water in which it lived. Nudged into the shallows by larger predators lurking in the deep, Tiktaalik (which means large, shallow-water fish in Inuktitut) may have used its newly evolved limbs to venture onto dry land where safety from being hunted and a buffet of centipedes and millipedes beckoned. This part-fish, part-terrestrial animal is the missing link between animal life in the sea and animal life on land.

— Sarah Rogers